Speaker Mike Johnson's replacement of Mike Turner as House Intelligence Committee chairman was partly motivated by Turner's treatment of the Havana syndrome issue.
A new report from U.S. intelligence finds no evidence linking a foreign power to the mysterious “Havana syndrome” injuries experienced by U.S. personnel.
After long denying the possibility, some intelligence agencies are no longer willing to rule out a mystery weapon.
Some intelligence agencies are now suggesting a foreign adversary may be behind the mysterious "Havana Syndrome" injuries reportedly sustained by U.S. officials overseas.
Their review of raw intelligence reporting has led them to the same assessment that has led the vast majority of operations officers in the IC to view Havana syndrome as partially the result of a ...
New intelligence about weapons research by American adversaries opens the possibility of a foreign actor behind the mysterious incidents that have injured hundreds of U.S. personnel serving overseas.
The White House contradicts a new intelligence assessment on the mysterious ailments that diplomats and spies have reported for years.
John Ratcliffe, CIA director-nominee, told the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence on Wednesday that he will aggressively review CIA analysis on the mysterious conditions suffered by overseas intelligence personnel and whether they were by enemy-directed energy weapons.
Two agencies say U.S. adversaries might have developed a device that could cause a range of symptoms.
A majority of U.S. intelligence agencies have reaffirmed in an updated assessment that it is "very unlikely" that a foreign adversary was responsible for so-called Havana Syndrome ailments, a U.S. intelligence official said on Friday.
Washington had taken a step in the "right direction" in announcing it would remove Cuba from its list of state sponsors of terrorism, the government in Havana said Tuesday.
Even though Marco Rubio’s Cuban-born parents left the island for the U.S. a few years before the coming to power of Fidel Castro in 1959, the next U.S. Secretary of State has wholeheartedly embraced the hardline anti-Castroism and anti-communism of the exile community in Miami.